. . "Partner_1" . . . . . . "2001-04-30T10:09:30+02:00"^^ . . . "Partner_1"^^ . "Partner_1" . . . . . . "JKR" . . "That partner in the Relationship who is realized as the subject of verbs in active form sentences, or of adjectives in predicative uses.\nJohn is married to Sue.\nJohn is Sue's husband.\nWhen the target word is a noun (e.g. mistress, lover, bachelor), that noun is annotated as Partner_1 and, if there is one, the other member of the Relationship is Partner_2.\nGeorge is a bachelor.\nGeorge's mistress left the party.\nGeorge has a mistress.\nWhen there is a word other than the target that refers to Partner_1, that word is tagged rather than the target.\nGeorge is Laura's lover."^^ . . . . . "Partner_1" . . "487"^^ . "That partner in the Relationship who is realized as the subject of verbs in active form sentences, or of adjectives in predicative uses. John is married to Sue. John is Sue's husband. When the target word is a noun (e.g. mistress, lover, bachelor), that noun is annotated as Partner_1 and, if there is one, the other member of the Relationship is Partner_2. George is a bachelor. George's mistress left the party. George has a mistress. When there is a word other than the target that refers to Partner_1, that word is tagged rather than the target. George is Laura's lover."@en . "That partner in the Relationship who is realized as the subject of verbs in active form sentences, or of adjectives in predicative uses. John is married to Sue. John is Sue's husband. When the target word is a noun (e.g. mistress, lover, bachelor), that noun is annotated as Partner_1 and, if there is one, the other member of the Relationship is Partner_2. George is a bachelor. George's mistress left the party. George has a mistress. When there is a word other than the target that refers to Partner_1, that word is tagged rather than the target. George is Laura's lover."@en . . "Core"^^ . "Core" . . . . . . . . . . .